From 135,000 years to 90,000 years ago, tropical Africa had
megadroughts more extreme and
widespread than any previously known for that region, according to new
research. Learning that now-lush tropical Africa was an arid scrubland
during the
early Late Pleistocene provides new insights into humans' migration out
of Africa and the evolution of fishes in Africa's Great Lakes. "Lake
Malawi, one of the deepest lakes in the world, acts as a rain
gauge," says lead scientist Andrew Cohen of the University of Arizona
in Tucson. "The lake level dropped at
least 1,968 feet – an extraordinary amount of water lost from the lake.
This
tells us that it was much drier at that time."
He adds, "Archaeological evidence shows relatively few
signs of human occupation in tropical Africa during the megadrought period." The new finding
provides an ecological explanation for the Out-of-Africa hypothesis that
suggests all humans descended from just a few people living in Africa sometime between 150,000 years and
70,000 years ago.
"We've got an explanation for why that might have
occurred – tropical Africa was extraordinarily dry about 100,000 years ago," says Cohen, a professor
of geosciences. "Maybe human populations just crashed."
Other researchers have documented droughts in individual
regions of Africa at that time, such as the Kalahari desert expanding north and the Sahel expanding south, he says. "But
no one had put it together that those droughts were part of a bigger
picture."
Tropical Africa's climate became wetter by 70,000 years ago, a time for
which there is evidence of more people in the region and of people moving
north. As the population rebounded, people left Africa, Cohen says.